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Burlington Free Press - Tom Brown: Recession takes a holiday


Black Friday has come and gone, but welcome to Cyber Monday.
Today is often referred to as the busiest day of the year for online shoppers. Figures don't necessarily bear that out, but like Black Friday is to bricks-and-mortar stores it certainly is an important holiday kickoff day for online retailers.
According to the online shopping tracker Permuto and reported by The Christian Science Monitor, sales on Cyber Monday last year hit $846 million. The peak day, they said, was actually Dec. 9 with $887 million in e-commerce.
Regardless, we all know that the Christmas season can make or break the entire year for retailers from Main Street to mainframe.
Economists have been guarded in assessing the prospects for this shopping season. The Conference Board, a nonprofit watcher of management and economic trends, predicts Americans will spend an average of $390 per household on holiday gifts this year. That's $28 less than last year's estimate.
I thought everyone was more secure about their financial situation this year as compared to last?
Anyway, it seems that we New Englanders, where Christmas was no doubt invented, are much less frugal than our reputations imply when it comes to buying gifts.
According to The Conference Board, we spend an average of $534 per household, by far the highest of any region of the U.S. Finishing second is the West North Central (which included Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota. Those Midwestern types spend about $470 per household. Only 26 percent of Americans plan to spend more than $500 on gifts, down 1 percent from last year.
The relative cheapskates are from the Mountain West (Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming).
Clearly we are a generous lot, but I suspect the reasons have a lot more to do with the difference in income and cost of living in the various regions than any inherent Grinch-ness in the Rocky Mountain air.
Simply put, things cost more here.
Among the other findings of The Conference Board survey, most of our online shopping budget goes to books and clothing. More than 40 percent of those surveyed said they would buy those items online this season.
What are your plans this season? Will you spend more or less than last year? Will you buy more from local businesses? Big boxes? Internet? Plan to use more cash and less credit?
Let us know.
Tom Brown is editor of Business Monday. He can be reached by e-mail at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or by calling 660-186

By Tom Brown

Published on Nov 30, 2009


Black Friday has come and gone, but welcome to Cyber Monday.


Today is often referred to as the busiest day of the year for online shoppers. Figures don't necessarily bear that out, but like Black Friday is to bricks-and-mortar stores it certainly is an important holiday kickoff day for online retailers.

burlingtonfreepresslogo

According to the online shopping tracker Permuto and reported by The Christian Science Monitor, sales on Cyber Monday last year hit $846 million. The peak day, they said, was actually Dec. 9 with $887 million in e-commerce.


Regardless, we all know that the Christmas season can make or break the entire year for retailers from Main Street to mainframe.


Read more... [Burlington Free Press - Tom Brown: Recession takes a holiday]
 
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review - Cyber shopping clicks in Western Pennsylvania

By Kim Leonard

Published on Nov 30, 2009


Western Pennsylvania residents love to shop online. So it's fitting that a Pittsburgh-area native coined the name for one of the Internet's biggest holiday shopping days.


pittsburghtribunereview"Cyber Monday" dates to 2005, when Scott Silverman and the staff at Shop.org surveyed retailers about lucrative sales days on their Web sites.


"Many saw a big sales day the Monday after Thanksgiving," said Silverman, executive director of the online branch of the National Retail Federation. "We put out a press release. The Wall Street Journal picked it up and did
a big story, and it just snowballed from there, with every evening network news and every newspaper running it."


Read more... [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review - Cyber shopping clicks in Western Pennsylvania]
 
US News - Cyber Monday Is a Fake Holiday

By Matthew Bandyk

People might say that these facts don't matter. What matters is how people perceive Cyber Monday, and the perception alone gives it meaning for consumers. After all, according to Shop.org, over 83 percent of major online retailers offered some kind of promotion on Cyber Monday. That's an impressive number for sure, but couldn't we say the same thing about Cyber Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, etc.? Many big stores have been offering deals since the weekend started, and continuing throughout this week (click here for more details).By Matthew Bandyk

Published on November 30, 2009


I know, as a journalist, I'm supposed to write about how today is Cyber Monday, the biggest online shopping day of the year, and how it's the latest rival to Black Friday, and about all the amazing deals that are coming your way. While it's true that there are deals out there today, let's put the charade aside: Cyber Monday is a made-up marketing term that has been promulgated by journalists looking for an easy way to write about online retail. Yes, the subject of the growth of online retail versus the decline of traditional retail is an interesting one and should be tackled, but let's not pretend that there is some online shopping day equivalent to Black Friday.


Here [PERMUTO LINK] is the best breakdown of everything you need to know about Cyber Monday—as a marketing term, not an actual event. The key fact is that since 2005 (the year "Cyber Monday" was first widely promulgated), the first Monday after Thanksgiving has never been the biggest online shopping day. Instead, consumers seem to buy more in roughly mid-December. Last year, the Monday after Thanksgiving was only the third-biggest online shopping day.


Read more... [US News - Cyber Monday Is a Fake Holiday]
 
Christian Science Monitor - After Black Friday comes Cyber Monday 2009. Is it more virtual than real?


Cyber Monday 2009 is not the biggest online shopping day of the holiday season. But if the hype continues, it could yet become just that.
CHICAGO
First Black Friday, then Cyber Monday. Is all the media hoopla about frantic, sales-hungry shoppers at malls and at their desktops during an extended Thanksgiving weekend an accurate portrayal of consumers’ holiday-shopping behavior? Or is it a reflection of what retailers wish were the case?
To be sure, retailers have expanded the weekend selling rush through so-called Cyber Monday, just as they have dialed back Black Friday store hours a bit further each year, now encroaching onto Thanksgiving night. The National Retail Federation, a trade organization representing 1.6 million retailers, says Monday is the kickoff to the online shopping season and a day when online sales spike.
That, however, may be more wishful thinking than a representation of consumer behavior. Each year since 2005, when the National Retail Federation (NRF) coined the term “Cyber Monday,” sales on that day were dwarfed by sales dates later in December. Last year, for instance, Cyber Monday sales reached $846 million, while the biggest online sales day was Dec. 9, with $887 million, according to Permuto, which tracks online shopping trends.
Indeed, Cyber Monday originally described a potential trend: consumers returning to work the Monday after Thanksgiving who were still eager to shop but had no recourse to do so except online.
The recognition of Cyber Monday among retailers has been gaining momentum: The NRF reported that 87 percent of retailers will have special Cyber Monday promotions this year, such as free shipping or one-day sales, up from 84 percent last year and 72 percent in 2007.
Though retailers are pulling out the stops to cheerlead for holiday sales in a recession, boxing consumer trends into a preconceived shopping holiday does not pass muster when it comes to the ways consumers actually shop.
In 2005, the year Cyber Monday was “invented,” it was not the busiest online shopping day. That designation, according to Ecommerce, went to Dec. 15. In fact, consumers generally spend more online as Christmas and Hanukkah draw nearer. The greatest window for online holiday shopping is Dec. 5-15, which allows for delivery and even possible returns.
As the media embrace Cyber Monday as an actual phenomenon, the day may eventually live up to expectations. Between 2005 and 2008, Cyber Monday sales increased 74 percent, beating the 60 percent revenue increase for other days that have been online sales record-holders for the holiday season. As Internet retailers boost special promotions, free shipping, and outreach on Cyber Monday, the gap could close further in coming years.
At least on Cyber Monday shoppers are spared the ignominious and ubiquitous term “doorbusters.” No Black Friday ad campaign this year is without the term, meant to describe sales so enticing that they will generate a mad rush for sales. But a Black Friday sales rush evokes last year’s tragic death of Jdimytai Damour, a security guard at a Wal-Mart in Valley Stream, N.Y. who was trampled when doors burst open at 5 a.m. and consumers stormed the store to shop. His death is cited as an example of consumerism run amok and remains a sore subject for the retailer.
Besides dealing with a lawsuit by Mr. Damour’s family, Wal-Mart faced a criminal investigation that forced it to hire safety experts who helped create a crowd-management plan for its New York locations. It also set up a $400,000 compensation fund to benefit victims injured in the stampede. To date, three shoppers have qualified for payment.

By Mark Guarino

Published on Nov 27, 2009


Cyber Monday 2009 is not the biggest online shopping day of the holiday season. But if the hype continues, it could yet become just that.

CHICAGO

First Black Friday, then Cyber Monday. Is all the media hoopla about frantic, sales-hungry shoppers at malls and at their desktops during an extended Thanksgiving weekend an accurate portrayal of consumers’ holiday-shopping behavior? Or is it a reflection of what retailers wish were the case?christiansciencemonitor


To be sure, retailers have expanded the weekend selling rush through so-called Cyber Monday, just as they have dialed back Black Friday store hours a bit further each year, now encroaching onto Thanksgiving night. The National Retail Federation, a trade organization representing 1.6 million retailers, says Monday is the kickoff to the online shopping season and a day when online sales spike.


Read more... [Christian Science Monitor - After Black Friday comes Cyber Monday 2009. Is it more virtual than real?]
 
North Jersey Record – Cyber shopping on Thanksgiving Day a growing tradition

By Joan Verndon

Published on Nov 25, 2009   


In homes across America, there’s a Thanksgiving tradition getting bigger every year, and having an impact on the nation’s retailers. After passing the turkey, Americans are reaching for the mouse.


northjersey
Thanksgiving Day is becoming increasingly important for online sales, according to e-commerce watchers. It has become the lead-in for five days of online deals experts say are causing some bargain hunters to shop online instead of standing in line at stores.


Read more... [North Jersey Record – Cyber shopping on Thanksgiving Day a growing tradition]
 
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